Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Like yourself, I've been travelling out of KL for the past
two weeks to Kemaman (in the coastal east-coast province of Terengganu, the
home-state of Adnan Othman) and Port Dickson (in Negeri Sembilan province) .
Next week, I'm going to leave for Sungai Petani (in the northern Kedah
province), before going to Port Dickson again.

Looking at the picture of you listening to the records, I
remember that my parents used to have their own Toshiba turntable in their
early years of marriage in the mid-1970s.

My aunt managed to take a photo of
myself as a young boy looking at the spinning vinyl; I remember very well that
it was a Cliff Richard’s LP issued jointly by EMI-Columbia.

In 2001, I bought the same LP from an antique shop in KL
and learned that the title was Cliff’s Hit Album. It motivated me to buy
my own a 1960 4-speed JVC Nivico portable turntable worth 300 ringgit (about
100 US dollars today).

random YouTube video of a 1960 JVC Nivico portable:

Unfortunately, the JVC turntable could no longer be used
as the stylus was completely worn out and the motor was not functioning
properly. It was impossible for me to repair it as the spare parts were not
available, so I disposed of it.

My mom was amazed at how I managed to get the Cliff
Richard LP, as her own copy was long gone; even her Toshiba turntable was
completely damaged due to mishandling by the transport company who carried it
along using its truck along our journey back to KL from JB in 1985, following
my dad’s transferring back to our hometown.

My mother is an ardent fan of Cliff herself, and she also
used to love to play another record by him, which was a 1968 EP containing
songs such as I Love You Forever Today, Mr. Nice, Marianne and Girl,
You’ll Be A Woman Soon.

Besides Cliff’s records, we used to have a few more
records, which I could still recall the artists and their song titles as
follows:

My parents also bought two compilation LPs, each
containing about 20 current English songs from the 70s and early 80s. I have
forgotten the song lists, but among the singers featured include Conway Twitty,
Glenn Campbell, The Stylistics, Dusty Springfield and K.C. & The Sunshine
Band.

There were only two Malay records in our collection then.
One was a soundtrack album from the 1976 film called Hapuslah Airmatamu (Wipe
Away Your Tears) ....

.....and Nasheed (Islamic spiritual) songs sung by an
all-ladies group called Al-Mizan (The Scale) :

During one of my visits to my grandpa’s kampong (village)
in northern Singapore in 1984, I discovered a collection of EPs belonging to my
dad and his brothers left idle inside my late grandpa’s chicken hut. To my
surprise, there were lots of collections of a mixture of Malay, Hindi and
English hits being kept there. I believe that my grandparents put them there as
the turntable at their home had been no longer playable. When the whole village
was demolished two years later, only the speakers were managed to be brought to
my uncle’s apartment.

It is very sad that both the turntables and the records
were completely damaged. Nevertheless, the nostalgia of seeing or having them
during my childhood days has never fade till today. In fact, it triggered my
interest towards both local and international music of the past, which finally
brings both of us together.